The chief of army staff, Lt-Gen Kenneth Minimah, said yesterday that
for the 2015 elections to hold in the North-East areas recently
recovered by the military from insurgents, the structures of government
and governance have to be reinstated in the areas
.
The army chief
also hinted that the country’s military had no information at the
moment regarding the whereabouts of the over 200 schoolgirls kidnapped
in Chibok, Borno State.
Lt-Gen Minimah stated this after
President Goodluck Jonathan had held a closed-door meeting with the
service chiefs, heads of security agencies in the country and the
chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC),
Professor Attahiru Jega, at the presidential villa, Abuja.
When
Jega came out of the meeting, which had started at about 11:45pm, he
refused to tell journalists why he was invited to Aso Rock.
When
confronted by journalists to speak on the outcome of the meeting, the
INEC boss, who was hurrying out of the place at about 2:42pm, simply
said, “I believe it went well”.
LEADERSHIP gathered, however,
that Jega attended the meeting to brief the president and the security
chiefs on the level preparedness of the commission for the 2015
elections billed to commence on Saturday, March 28.
The security
chiefs were also said to have briefed President Jonathan on how prepared
they were to guarantee the safety of life, property and election
materials during and after the polls.
The army boss, Minimah,
told State House correspondents after the meeting that the council
reviewed preparations in the North East zone, particularly in the last
three weeks, and renewed its confidence in the Nigerian Armed Forces.
He, however, remarked that for the 2015 elections to hold in areas of
the zone recently recovered by military forces, the structures of
civilian governance have to be reinstated in the areas.
The
army chief, who was responding to questions on the forthcoming
elections, said: “You know Yobe and Adamawa states have been liberated
completely, and we look forward to the reinstatement of structures of
government and governance.
“I am also sure you know that in Borno
State, out of the 27 local governments, we have three local governments
remaining – Abadam, Kalabaldi and Gwoza – and we are optimistic that
with time we will liberate those local governments.
“INEC is
still there; INEC has to reassess the situation and evaluate; because
the areas have been liberated, but I can also tell you that not all
structures of governance have been reinstated, and they will need to be
reinstated so that citizens can go back to their areas; it is then, I
think, they can execute their rights as voters.”
Asked how soon it would take to restore the structures of government in the areas, Minimah said, “I don’t know”.
When asked whether the military will conclude operations in the North
East before the March 28 date for the polls, the army chief said: “War
is war. It is our wish (to conclude the mission) and we pray God gives
that to us, but war is war; war sometimes is not fought on some
platforms or permutations.”
On the whereabouts of the over 200
schoolgirls kidnapped in Chibok, Borno State, Minimah said, “No news for
now. In all the liberated areas we have, we have also made enquiries
but the truth is when the terrorists are running away, they also run
with their families.
“And those we have come in contact have not
made any comments suggesting that Chibok girls were there and taken
away. But we are optimistic that as it becomes closer, the territory is
becoming elusive to them; we will get further details on that.”
Also in attendance at the meeting are Vice President Namadi Sambo;
secretary to the government of the federation, Anyim Pius Ayim; chief of
staff to the president, General Jones Arogbofa (retd), national
security adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki; attorney-general of the
federation, Mohammed Adoke; minister of foreign affairs, Ambassador
Aminu Wali, and his counterparts in police affairs, Jelil Adesiyan, and
interior, Abba Moro.
Others include chief of defence staff, Alex
Badeh; chief of air staff, Air Vice Marshall Adeola Amosu; chief of
naval staff, Vice Admiral Usman Jibrin; inspector-general of police
Suleiman Abba, as well as the heads of the Department of State Security
(DSS) and the National Intelligence Agency (NIA).
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